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Harrison Hong, David Sraer, Jialin Yu, Inflation Bets on the Long Bond, The Review of Financial Studies, Volume 30, Issue 3, March 2017, Pages 900–947, https://doi.org/10.1093/rfs/hhw090
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The liquidity premium theory of interest rates predicts that the Treasury yield curve steepens with inflation uncertainty as investors demand larger risk premiums to hold long-term bonds. By using the dispersion of inflation forecasts to measure this uncertainty, we find the opposite. Since the prices of long-term bonds move more with inflation than short-term ones, investors also disagree and speculate more about long-maturity payoffs with greater uncertainty. Shorting frictions, measured by using Treasury lending fees, then lead long maturities to become overpriced and the yield curve to flatten. We estimate this inflation-betting effect using time variation in inflation disagreement and Treasury supply.
Received September 3, 2014; editorial decision August 5, 2016 by Editor Andrew Karolyi